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OKLAHOMA — The woman accused of driving under the influence and plowing her car into a crowd of spectators at an Oklahoma State University homecoming parade also faces murder charges, police said Sunday.

Stillwater police has released the mugshot of Adacia Avery Chambers, she is the suspect that plowed into the crowd at the OSU parade.

Adacia Chambers is being held in jail on four counts of second-degree murder for Saturday’s deadly crash, which killed four people and injured dozens more. If convicted, she could face life in prison, police said.

Chambers, 25, is set to appear in court on Monday, the Stillwater Police Department said in a statement.

The Saturday crash at the Oklahoma State University parade killed a toddler, a graduate student and a couple who’d worked at the school for decades, officials said.

It also injured dozens of people, including 11 victims younger than 13.

A woman suspected of drunken driving crashed a car into a crowd watching Oklahoma State University’s homecoming parade in Stillwater on Saturday morning, killing three people and injuring 22 others

Injured victims’ families await word

A day later, family members of the injured waited for word as their loved ones underwent surgeries and medical tests.

“It’s been a crazy 24 hours,” Mark McNitt said, tearing up as he told reporters about the crash and its aftermath. One minute, McNitt was standing beside his stepfather, 54-year-old Leo Schmitz, near the end of the parade route. The next minute, he said, things were so chaotic it seemed like a bomb had gone off.

“All I remember is a gush of wind, and then the sound. Leo, who was standing next to me, wasn’t standing next to me. He was off to the side,” McNitt said.

Now his stepfather is one of four patients who remain in critical condition, while family members keep vigil. McNitt described his injuries as severe, but he praised doctors for their care and people from across the state for coming together during the tragedy.

“We missed the game,” he said, “but we feel the love, and we’ll get through this.”

Oklahoma homecoming parade crash

A family mourns

Oklahoma State University President Burns Hargis called the crash an “incomprehensible tragedy.” In a statement, the school said three of the victims were “members of the OSU family.”

Marvin Stone, 65, was a retired professor and researcher in the Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering. His 65-year-old wife, Bonnie, had worked for the university for more than 30 years as “an unselfish and dedicated employee” in Institutional Research and Information Management, the school said.

Another employee at the school, Nicollete Strauch, survived the crash, but her 2-year-old son Nash was killed, the university said. Strauch, who is a sophomore majoring in chemical engineering and works in parking and transit, is recovering from injuries and devastated by her son’s death, officials said.

In a statement, the president of the University of Central Oklahoma said one of the people killed was Nikita Nakal, an MBA student from Mumbai, India. Police named a victim as 23-year-old Nakita Prabhakar.

“While our thoughts and prayers are with the Oklahoma State University community tonight following the tragic events during OSU’s homecoming parade this morning, it is with deep sadness that I ask you to extend those sentiments to the family and friends of one of our own students,” wrote President Don Betz. “Our students come to Central with their unique goals, hopes and dreams, and Nikita was undoubtedly no different.”

She had been attending Saturday’s parade with friends, Hargis said.

Of the 47 people treated after the crash, 17 remained hospitalized and four were in critical condition Sunday, officials said. Eleven of those treated for injuries were 13 and younger, including a 1-year-old, a 3-year-old and four 6-year-olds, Stillwater police said.

‘I flew over some strollers’

Chambers allegedly drove her 2014 Hyundai Elantra into an unmanned police motorcycle before careening into the crowd of spectators.

The deadly crash occurred at 10:31 a.m., just hours before the school’s centerpiece homecoming event — a football game between the nationally ranked, undefeated OSU Cowboys and the University of Kansas — and only two blocks from the soon-to-be jampacked, 50,000-capacity Boone Pickens Stadium.

The suspect in the accident, Adacia Chambers, as she was being taken into police dustody.

The festive homecoming scene quickly turned into one of horror.

“I can’t describe it any more clearly than this: people flying in the air,” OSU graduate student Paul Sims said of the moment of impact.